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20th April 2015
11:20pm BST

In terms of his international future, Given is hopeful that Grealish will be performing in a green jersey in the coming years.
"We'd love him to come [to Ireland]," he said. "The good thing is, a few weeks back, that he was obviously over in Ireland to collect the U21 award, the young player of the year award, and I know his dad, mum and girlfriend were over and I think his gran was up from Kerry.
"I think the welcome and the interview he did afterwards was pretty positive.
"But the flip side of the coin is that he started our last three games and with such a big, high-profile game yesterday, the English FA will obviously be thinking 'my God, we need to get this guy onto our books.'
"So it's going to be a difficult decision. He's played underage with Ireland and he's enjoyed it. He said to me that he loved playing with Ireland and he's loved coming across. He's at a bit of a crossroads now, as we all know, and it's hard for him to make that decision. He does have a strong connection with Ireland but, of course, he was born in England so he has that connection as well so it's a tricky one.
"I'm in his ear all the time, not even trying to persuade him. I just think he's probably a little bit confused because he is a very young man. It is such a big decision for his whole career, his whole life ahead of him, and to make it at such a young age.
"We are coaxing him along and hopefully he does come and play for us because he'd be a real star player for us."
Speaking to the UK media today, Grealish's father failed to give a concrete answer about which nation the winger will declare for but Given doesn't think that he was ducking the question.
"To be honest, I think they're just undecided," Given said.
"Fans, players, Irish people in general all probably wanted to know yesterday so I really think that, deep down, he doesn't actually know yet himself. This is a big decision and one of the biggest decisions he'll make in his whole career.
"He's so young but he could probably be in our squad now, the Irish senior squad, but maybe he wouldn't be in the English squad.
"But in a couple of years he could be a regular in the English squad. You just don't know."
"All these emotions, thoughts and pluses/minuses going on in his head. It is a tough decision and we'll not force him by backing him into a corner. I just hope he comes to that decision for everyone concerned, the sooner the better."
"Martin O'Neill is a hugely experienced manager and he's got players in that position already. Maybe it is too soon, too big of an ask, not for the England game obviously because that's a friendly but the stakes are so high when we play Scotland."Explore more on these topics: